News
December 17, 2008
Energy secretary nominee sees coal as 'nightmare'
Chu worries carbon capture won't work
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- President-elect Barack Obama's pick for U.S. energy secretary isn't sold on the idea that technology to capture greenhouse emissions and pump them underground will save the coal industry. Watch Chu's speech, the coal section is 28 minutes in. Click here.

 

Carbon capture and storage research is still in its early stages, said Steven Chu, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist announced by Obama this week as his nominee to run the U.S. Department of Energy. Real-world projects to pump millions of tons of carbon dioxide might also be rejected unless scientists show it can be done safely, Chu said during an April speech.

"Coal is my worst nightmare," said Chu, director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a Stanford University professor.

Chu noted that coal is the current "default option" for meeting growing energy needs in the United States, China and India. But coal is also firing continued increases in worldwide carbon dioxide emissions, even at a time when scientists say the need to dramatically reduce those emissions is critical.

"We have lots of fossil fuel," Chu said during a talk outlining his views on energy policy. "That's really both good and bad news. We won't run out of energy, but there's enough carbon in the ground to really cook us."

Chu said existing pilot projects involving a few million tons of carbon dioxide sequestration are far too small to tell if the process would work on the scale needed.

"It's sort of a research and development issue," he said. "I think we have to do this if we're going to go forward with coal, but it's not a guarantee that we have a solution with coal."

Late last week, when word began leaking that Chu was a likely Obama Cabinet choice, his comments about coal began circulating on the Internet, primarily after they were posted on a Wall Street Journal blog.

Bill Raney, president of the West Virginia Coal Association, said he had not seen Chu's remarks, but that they gave him cause for concern.

"What I'm concerned about is how many coal mines has he been to, and what is his thought about the coal mines and their families who rely on this industry?" Raney said. "That may be his personal opinion, but that's got to be sobered up a bit."

Other coal boosters were familiar with Chu's comments, but also insisted they were less concerned.

"Any remarks Dr. Chu has made over the years, whether positive or negative about coal must be viewed against specific public policy objectives laid out by President-elect Obama," said Carol Raulston, spokeswoman for the National Mining Association.

Raulston noted that Obama has emphasized "energy independence" and supports "the next generation of clean coal technology to capture and store emissions of carbon from coal-based generation."

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Posted By: dobermanmacleod (6:26am 12-24-2008)
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any carbon diet strategy would be dependent upon clean coal:

"The vast majority of new power stations in China and India will be coal-fired; not "may be coal-fired"; will be. So developing carbon capture and storage technology is not optional, it is literally of the essence." --"Breaking the Climate Deadlock," Tony Blair, June 26, 2008

But, Vaclav Smil, an energy expert at the University of Manitoba, has estimated that capturing and burying just 10 percent of the carbon dioxide emitted over a year from coal-fire plants at current rates would require moving volumes of compressed carbon dioxide greater than the total annual flow of oil worldwide -- a massive undertaking requiring decades and trillions of dollars. "Beware of the scale," he stressed."

"The alternative (to geoengineering) is the acceptance of a massive natural cull of humanity and a return to an Earth that freely regulates itself but in the hot state." --Dr James Lovelock, August 2008

Posted By: smarbap (4:47pm 12-21-2008)
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One Citizen is right! Looking at the current temperature map for the country, which indicates a blast of cold, arctic air along with massive snowfall amounts all along the northern tier of states, how could anyone possibly doubt the validity of "Global Warming"?

Posted By: phixer (6:06am 12-21-2008)
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I keep waiting to see these windfarms being built, so far, it seems to be just talk.

Posted By: Bob Kincaid (3:32pm 12-20-2008)
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What "bad information," Engr? Are you privy to some secret knowledge that says the wind will stop blowing on intact mountaintops?

Where's the name-calling? "Sociopath" is a scientific term that may be applied to people who live without a conscience. Here are the traits of a sociopath http://www.mcafee.cc/Bin/sb.html Mountain Remover behavior fits in almost every single category. That's not "name-calling," Engr, that's the application of definitional terms to extant facts.

Here: let's try one just for an example: "They never recognize the rights of others and see their self-serving behaviors as permissible." Witness any Mountain Remover's strident cries that he has a "right" to blow up mountains in order to keep some standard of living. Witness the Mountain Remover's disdain for the lives of people in the communities he destroys in order to obtain that "standard of living."

It's literally textbook sociopathic behavior.

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